Bell Sports

Bell Sports
Headquarters Rantoul, Illinois, United States
Parent Vista Outdoor
Website www.bellhelmets.com
Helmet of F1 driver Michael Schumacher in 1995
Bell motorcycle helmet

Bell Sports, a division of Vista Outdoor, is an American manufacturer of bicycle, auto racing, and motorcycle helmets. BRG Sports, owner of Riddell football helmets, sold the Bell, Giro, C-Preme, and Blackburn brands to Vista in 2016.[1]

Bell Racing is headquartered in Rantoul, Illinois, with manufacturing facilities at an industrial park which used to be Chanute Air Force Base. Bell Racing USA, an independent company that uses the Bell mark under license, is headquartered in nearby Champaign, Illinois, while Bell Racing Europe is headquartered in Saintes, near Brussels, Belgium.

History

The company started in 1923 as Bell Auto Parts in Bell, California.[2][3] It produced its first race car helmets in 1954. The Bell Helmet Company was formed as a division of Bell Auto Parts in 1956. Bell introduced the first full-face motorcycle helmet on the market in 1968 the Star.[4] In 1971 they produced the first full-face off-road motorcycle helmet.[5] It introduced a bicycle helmet in 1975. As well as motor sports helmets Bell produced helmets for skydiving and skiing, hockey, football, baseball, fire, police and anti-ballistic for military use.

In 1980 the company was merged with Riddell to form Bell-Riddell Inc. In 1991, Bell-Riddell's motorcycle division was sold and became Bell Helmets, Inc. The remaining company was renamed Bell Sports, Inc. In 1999, the auto racing division was sold and split into two separate companies called Bell Racing Company (North America) and Bell Racing Europe (Europe, Asia and Africa). Bell Sports reacquired Bell Helmets in 2002, creating Bell Powersports.[6] In 2005, it reacquired Bell Racing Company,[7] and was itself merged into Easton-Bell Sports, Inc. in 2006.[8] Vista Outdoor acquired the company in 2016.

Public safety initiatives

Bell Sports has a long history of contributing to bicycle and wheel-related safety programs sponsored by Safe Kids USA and in 2004 began providing "Safe Kids Ready to Roll" kits to Safe Kids USA coalitions to aid them in public safety instruction.[9]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.